Honors

IHN student Kirsten Metter and her advisor Sarah Frisch smiling with Kirsten's award

The Honors Program in Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies is available to both our Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies majors and to non-majors.

Honors theses may be comprised of either a research paper or a creative project.

Honors students are advised by Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Affiliated Faculty. We recommend preparing for one's Honors Project as early as possible by taking courses in your area of interest and by building relationships with potential faculty advisors.

For more information on the requirements for our Honors program, visit our bulletin entry

Applications to the honors program should be submitted to the Student Services Manager at antnguyn [at] stanford.edu (antnguyn)antnguyn [at] stanford.edu (@stanford.edu).  Applications consist of a thesis proposal, current transcript, and application form. The application deadline for 2022-2023 is April 25, 2024.

Download the Honors proposal form

Admission and Requirements for FGSS Majors

Admission

The honors program offers an opportunity to do independent research for a senior thesis. It is open to students with a grade point average (GPA) of 3.5 or better in course work in Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, or demonstrated academic competence. Students should begin the application process by consulting with the Program Director or the Associate Director as early as possible in the junior year, preferably by the end of Winter Quarter.

During the application process, students design a project in consultation with their proposed thesis advisers and the Associate Director. A proposal describing the project and the number of units to be taken toward the honors directed project must be submitted to the program office for final approval. All projects must have a primary focus on gender or sexuality.

NOTE: FEMGEN 199A, B, C (Honors Seminar) and FEMGEN 105 (Honors Work) units do NOT count towards the 63 units for the major or the 30 units for the minor.

Requirements

  1. Students enroll for 2-3 units per quarter in FEMGEN 199AFEMGEN 199B, and FEMGEN 199C Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Honors Workshop.
  2. Students in the honors program also enroll for FEMGEN 105 Honors Work with their respective advisers, for an additional 2-3 units each quarter.  The combined number of units in 199 and 105 must be 10-15 units over the course of senior year.
  3. A semifinal draft of the thesis is due early in Spring Quarter of the senior year.
  4. The final thesis must be submitted by May 15 (or the following Monday should May 15 fall on a weekend). The completed thesis must be submitted with the Thesis Completion Form, which requires the adviser's signature of approval. Creative projects must include a section of critical analysis.
For Majors in Other Departments

Interdisciplinary Honors in Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies for majors in other departments or programs, as distinguished from honors for students pursuing a major in Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, is intended to complement study in any major. Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies minors who wish to pursue honors in Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies should apply through the process for non-majors. 

Admission

The Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies honors program is open to students majoring in any field with an overall GPA of 3.5 or better or demonstrated academic competence.

Students must complete the following with a grade of 'B+' or better:

  • Either FEMGEN 101 Introduction to Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies or FEMGEN 103 Feminist and Queer Theories and Methods Across the Disciplines, and two other FGSS courses that relate to their research topic.

Students should begin the application process by consulting with the Program Director or the Associate Director as early as possible in the junior year, preferably by the end of Winter Quarter. During the application process, students design a project in consultation with their proposed thesis advisers and the Associate Director. A proposal describing the project and the number of units to be taken toward the honors directed project must be submitted to the program office for final approval. All projects must have a primary focus on gender or sexuality.

Requirements

  1. Students enroll for 2-3 units per quarter in FEMGEN 199AFEMGEN 199B, and FEMGEN 199C Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Honors Workshop.
  2. Students in the honors program also enroll for FEMGEN 105 Honors Work with their respective advisers, for an additional 2-3 units each quarter.  The combined number of units in 199 and 105 must be 10-15 units over the course of senior year..
  3. A semifinal draft of the thesis is due early in Spring Quarter of the senior year.
  4. The final thesis must be submitted by May 15 (or the following Monday should May 15 fall on a weekend). The completed thesis must be submitted with the Thesis Completion Form, which requires the adviser's signature of approval. Creative projects must include a section of critical analysis.

Undergraduate Advising and Research Office

The Undergraduate Advising and Research (UAR) office provides information and guidelines about grant and fellowship support for Honors theses and other undergraduate research projects.

Honors Theses: Research or Creative

Theses

Research Theses

Because FGSS is an interdisciplinary department, our honors theses vary widely in style and method. Some students perform close readings of texts—historical, fictional, visual, and spacial--and situate those readings in the context of a broader academic conversations. Students in the social sciences may conduct research involving human subjects via surveys, interviews, and field observations; these research projects may be qualitative or quantitative or may take a mixed-methods approach. Still other projects are historical or theoretical in nature. Whatever a student's discipline, FGSS offers mentorship and guidance to complete a thesis that is academically viable in both the world of sexuality and gender studies and in the student's home department.

Through managing their thesis projects, students develop skills in research methodology and analysis in addition to expertise in their research topic. Students work closely with their research advisors and FGSS honors cohort. They also attend weekly FGSS workshops and lectures geared toward refining various aspects of their projects. These weekly check-ins facilitate students' exchange of ideas, adherence to a realistic timeline, and self-awareness of their research methodology.

Creative Theses

The creative honors thesis in FGSS offers students from all disciplines the opportunity to build a creative project around an insight, idea, quandary, or mission associated with feminism, gender, and/or sexuality. This project will build on rigorous academic research in the domain of FGSS addressed by the project. Creative theses may be in any medium and must be accompanied by an academic paper that articulates the implicit argument of the project, the academic literature on which the project builds, and the other creative projects with which it is in conversation. Creative thesis writers will work closely with their advisors and with their peers in FGSS to develop their project's intention, form, and scope. Past creative projects have included short story cycles, novellas, poetry, memoir, graphic storytelling, and film.

Students interested in completing a creative honors thesis with FGSS should meet with potential advisors and with FGSS honors faculty to discuss possible structures of their thesis and to develop a plan that would meet FGSS requirements while staying true to the guiding intentions of the project. The proposal submitted to the honors program should be understood as a "pitch" that will necessarily evolve over the course of the honors year. Students will benefit from mentors in FGSS and a tight-knit group of peers who will help to keep the project on track and will challenge the author to grow as a scholar and artist. FGSS encourages creativity and welcomes the opportunity to work with students on projects that exceed the traditional purview of honors theses.

2022-2023 FGSS Honors Thesis Projects

Luke Babbitt

Luke Babbitt (he/they) is a senior pursuing a B.A. in Political Science and an M.S. in Computer Science. Their thesis measures the social motivations behind gender assignment before birth, at birth, and in early childhood. From a sociologist’s perspective, Luke’s research seeks to diagnose gender assignment as a social norm — meaning it is a decision made due to normative expectations and sanctions rather than independent preference. His thesis also analyzes our obsession with the gender binary in early childhood and explores alternative models of parenting. Before we can change gender assignment, we first must understand it. His thesis is for non-binary and transgender youth and adults everywhere.

Kirsten Mettler

Kirsten Mettler is majoring in political science with a minor in feminist, gender, and sexuality studies. She is pursuing a creative thesis, writing a speculative fiction short story collection on the intersection of technological evolution and gender-based violence. Her project is inspired by policy work she conducted at AccessNow and ChildFund International on issues of online privacy, content moderation, social media, gaming, digital harassment, and nonconsensual image sharing. She thanks Michelle Dauber for her mentorship, and her thesis advisor is Sarah Frisch. Mettler will be attending Harvard Law School in the fall.

2021-2022 FGSS Honors Thesis Projects

Muhammad Yusuf Khattak

Muhammad is a senior studying philosophy. His thesis is an effort to draw on phenomenological critiques of artificial intelligence in order to generate an ethical framework for its governance. The thesis first attempts to diagnose the type of reasoning narrow AI systems engage in and how that might be more adept at dealing with certain problems over others. Despite great progress in the field, he aims to argue that the strictly statistics-driven framework embedded in AI has some serious limitations. Muhammad's hope with this paper is to introduce a new perspective to current conversation about ethics and tech, separate from predominant instrumentalist point of view. His advisors are Adrian Daub and Gabrielle Jackson. 

Matthew Haide Zheng

Matthew Haide Zheng (he/they pronouns) is a double major in Political Science and Human Biology, also completing the Interdisciplinary Honors program in FGSS. Matthew thesis is an ethnography of LGBTQ+ political power in Washington, D.C. In summer 2020, Matthew conducted over 50 interviews spanning 75+ hours with LGBTQ+ individuals, groups, and organizations in the House of Representatives, the Senate, the White House, government affairs-lobbying firms, the nonprofit sector, and grassroots activists all in the D.C. metropolitan area. Using this ethnographic data, his thesis aims to break novel ground in studies of the LGBTQ+ movement, scholarship on LGBTQ assimilation/radicalism, and the measurement of political power more generally. The project is supported by the Franz Boas Summer Grant from the Department of Anthropology and the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences. His thesis advisors are Margaret Levi and Sylvia Yanagisako

Authors Publication Year Title Publisher
Luke Babbitt 2023 Gender in the Cradle: Evaluating Gender Assignment as a Social Norm
Kirsten Mettler 2023 TL;DR Pixel Dick: A speculative science fiction short story collection on gender-based violence in the digital age
Muhammad Khattak 2022 Against Techno-Chauvinism: Why Technology Cannot Solve Ethical Problems
Matthew Haide Zheng 2022 The Hill Beyond Community: A Political Ethnography of Queer Networks, Power, and Spectacular Intimacy in Washington, D.C.
Claire Margot Dauge-Roth 2021 Choose Your Own Beast: Short Stories
Julia Belle Adams 2021 Masculinity Syndrome: A Novel
Christina Misaki Nikitin 2021 Queer Urban Memoir: Towards a Critical Ethnography of Black Queer Musicians in Cape Town
Eunice Jung 2021 Undesirable Girls: The Politics of Love, Self-Making, and Desire in Dropping Out of School to Work
Ashe Huang 2020 Asian, Female, Future: Yellow Embodiment in the Posthuman Age
Lucy Arnold 2020 Early History of Marriage, Labor, and Sex Migration Dynamics in the U.S.
Tabor Hoatson 2020 Politicizing Substance Addiction in Transgender and Gender Non-Conforming Communities
Mehr Kumar 2020 The Complaining Party: a collection of poetry and prose
Jasmine Kerber 2020 “The Thing With the Ribbons”: A Media Analysis Exploring Perceptions of Rhythmic Gymnastics in the United States
Colette Brannan 2019 Drag Performance: Exploring Identity and Queering Queer Spaces
Lucas Benjamin Lawrence 2019 fragment[ed]: a novel
Catherine Xie 2019 Reimagining Sexual Violence Through Theater: Narrative, Memory, and History in Venus and How I Learned to Drive
Alison Logia 2019 Supporting Diversity, Sabotaging Intersectionality: The Limits of Employee Resource Groups for Queer and Trans Women of Color in Tech
Julia Freels 2019 The Fringes: A Novel
Charlie Dubach-Reinhold 2019 Transverse Casting: Thinking Gender through Layers
Jasmine Mueller-Hsia 2018 Sexuality Education as the Practice of Freedom: Creating Student-Derived Curricula for Youth Experiencing Systemic Oppression
Allison Rose Martin 2018 The Distance Between Texans and Abortion
Leela Srinivasan 2018 The Shame to Cure: A Counter-Epic of Gender, Language, and the Mind
Michela Rodriguez 2018 Waiting Room: A Feminist Play
Sydney Osifeso 2017 "Loving Ourselves Enough to Live": Black Women, Femmes, and Emotional Justice in the Era of Black Lives Matter
Mallory Simone Frasier 2017 Cindy, or the Study of Monsters: A Creative Exploration of Adolescent Girls' Relationship with Fiction